2008/9/1 Felipe Balbi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Sat, Aug 30, 2008 at 08:16:00PM +0300, Felipe Balbi wrote:
>> From: Felipe Balbi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>
>> The following drivers are going upstream for integration.
>> They have been sitting on linux-omap for quite a while just
>> increasing the diff against mainline and probability of
>> merge conflicts.
>
> Just one comment to this. I had to left bluetooth driver out of the
> series because it's using omap2_block/allow_sleep in the driver code.
> That should be fixed and the set_clock function should come via
> platform_data to the driver.
>
>  53 static void hci_h4p_set_clk(struct hci_h4p_info *info, int *clock, int 
> enable)
>  54 {
>  55         unsigned long flags;
>  56
>  57         spin_lock_irqsave(&info->clocks_lock, flags);
>  58         if (enable && !*clock) {
>  59                 NBT_DBG_POWER("Enabling %p\n", clock);
>  60                 clk_enable(info->uart_fclk);
>  61 #ifdef CONFIG_ARCH_OMAP2
>  62                 if (cpu_is_omap24xx()) {
>  63                         clk_enable(info->uart_iclk);
>  64                         omap2_block_sleep();
>  65                 }
>  66 #endif
>  67         }
>  68         if (!enable && *clock) {
>  69                 NBT_DBG_POWER("Disabling %p\n", clock);
>  70                 clk_disable(info->uart_fclk);
>  71 #ifdef CONFIG_ARCH_OMAP2
>  72                 if (cpu_is_omap24xx()) {
>  73                         clk_disable(info->uart_iclk);
>  74                         omap2_allow_sleep();
>  75                 }
>  76 #endif
>  77         }
>  78
>  79         *clock = enable;
>  80         spin_unlock_irqrestore(&info->clocks_lock, flags);
>  81 }
>
> That driver is full of arch specific code and should be cleaned up ASAP.
>
> A few things I could get by briefly looking at the driver (actualy only
> drivers/bluetooth/hci_h4p/core.c):

There's also a curious issue in hci_h4p_interrupt I hit recently but
after looking at the rest of the driver thought it was beating a dead
horse..., but just in case it isn't:
the driver assumes the OMAP UART, but then it uses UART_IIR_ID which
is only valid for standard UARTs, causing OMAP-specific Rx errors to
be ignored silently.  Turns out that on my N810 there are actually Rx
errors reported during firmware upload, but I didn't find a better way
to handle them than to ignore them:

--- a/drivers/bluetooth/hci_h4p/core.c
+++ b/drivers/bluetooth/hci_h4p/core.c
@@ -482,7 +491,14 @@ static irqreturn_t hci_h4p_interrupt(int irq, void *data)

        NBT_DBG("In interrupt handler iir 0x%.2x\n", iir);

-       iir &= UART_IIR_ID;
+       iir &= 0x1e; /* OMAP UART has wider INT than UART_IIR_ID */
+
+       /*
+        * Often Rx errors are reported but reading the receive buffer
+        * gives the correct data, so treat it as an Rx interrupt.
+        */
+       if (iir == 0xc)
+               iir = 0x4;

        if (iir == UART_IIR_MSI) {
                msr = hci_h4p_inb(info, UART_MSR);

The tsc210x drivers should be upstreamable with the exception of ALSA
code which needs to be converted to ASoC.  Maruk Vasut found a leak in
one error path, but I can't charge the device that has the tsc2102
that I used for testing.

I have some improvements to drivers/net/irda/omap-ir.c (clean-up and
removing OMAP16xx specific bits to support OMAP1) but again, have no
charger for the device.

Thanks
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